Standing at 7ft 4in, Andre was the planet’s most well-known wrestler throughout the 1970s and 80s.

Ill health meant the monstrous Frenchman was on the decline by the time Taker arrived in WWE back in 1990.

But the Dead Man has spoken about how Andre, who passed away due to congestive heart failure in 1993, had a masterplan to have one last epic counter with the Phenom.

Undertaker, a seven-time world champion, told Pastor Ed Young as part of the Wrastlin' series: “I never got the chance to wrestle Andre. By the time that I got there, his health was really in decline. He wrestled a few times and it was funny because Andre was really old school.

“Andre didn’t like big guys either — he loved me, thank goodness. But for most big guys he thought they were arrogant or bullies or whatnot, but he had his way with a lot of guys that you would be like, ‘Oh that’s a pretty tough guy,’ [but] Andre would set him straight.

“Anyway, he liked me and, you know, I guess we always think we got one [match] left in us you know.”

Taker, who fights fellow legend Triple H at WWE’s Super Show-Down on Saturday, continued: “He’d come in, he’s Andre The Giant. Biggest star that’s ever [been] at that time in wrestling. Worldwide phenomenon, he was always the first guy in the locker room.

“He was always there, he would love to sit there and play Cribbage and I’d come in and say, ‘Hey boss, how you doing today?’

LATEST WWE NEWS

'GONNA KILL ME'

Nikki Bella admits it will 'kill' her to see John Cena with another woman

'HE'S INTOXICATED'

'They can’t control me'

“[He’d say], ‘Good. You know one day kid, me and you. I have this idea.’ ‘Oh really boss? Tell me about it.’ And he’d never tell me.”

It was not just Undertaker that Andre would not tell, the Giant kept his plan secret until his dying day.

Taker added: “A good friend of mine to this day, his name is Tim White, he drove Andre around, he was one of the referees, and I had asked Tim all the time: ‘Did he ever tell you?’ I would ask and he’d never tell me.

“He was old school in that because he didn’t want anyone else to do it because he thought he was going to get to a point where he could get back in the ring and we could do something that would be a big deal.

“No one knows what it was, but you know he ended up passing away and he never let me know. I wonder to this day, ‘Man, I bet it was good.”

You can watch WWE Super Show-Down live on the WWE Network this Saturday from 9am.